Abstract

Although the brown howler monkey (Alouatta clamitans) is a relatively well-studied Neotropical primate, its behavioral and dietary flexibility at the intra-population level remains poorly documented. This study presents data collected on the behavior and ecology of two closely located groups of brown howlers during the same period at the RPPN Feliciano Miguel Abdala in southeastern Brazil. One group occupied a primary valley habitat, henceforth the Valley Group (VG), and the other group occupied a regenerating hillside habitat, the Hill Group (HG). We hypothesized differences in the behavior and ecological parameters between these sympatric groups due to the predicted harsher conditions on the hillside, compared to the valley. We measured several habitat parameters within the home range of both groups and collected data on the activity budget, diet and day range lengths, from August to November 2005, between dawn and dusk. In total, behavioral data were collected for 26 (318 h) and 28 (308 h) sampling days for VG and HG, respectively. As we predicted, HG spent significantly more time feeding and consumed less fruit and more leaves than VG, consistent with our finding that the hillside habitat was of lower quality. However, HG also spent less time resting and more time travelling than VG, suggesting that the monkeys had to expend more time and energy to obtain high-energy foods, such as fruits and flowers that were more widely spaced in their hill habitat. Our results revealed that different locations in this forest vary in quality and raise the question of how different groups secure their home ranges. Fine-grained comparisons such as this are important to prioritize conservation and management areas within a reserve.

Highlights

  • From the point of view of a primate, rainforest habitats are not homogeneous places

  • We chose to follow two howler monkey groups of similar size and composition; one in a valley bottom habitat that we considered high quality, Valley Group (VG) and another on a hillside next to the VG, a lower quality habitat, Hillside Group (HG)

  • This study revealed differences in diet, time budget, and travel distance between our two study groups. Such variation has previously been documented between A. clamitans populations separated by several hundred kilometers [22,27,30,45,46] and within single Alouatta groups in different seasons [22,27,30], such ecological and behavioral differences in contrasting microhabitats in the same area are rarely studied [3]

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Summary

Introduction

Finegrained variations in environmental conditions at the scale of a single study site are expected due to variation in elevation (topography) and associated water table, steepness of terrain, soil nutrient gradients among other factors [1]. These environmental variables will affect the structure and composition of local plant communities contributing to the heterogeneity in local ecological resources and conditions available to primates [2]. Primates with large home ranges negotiate such fine-grained heterogeneity by traveling across the landscape seeking out patches of high quality habitat (e.g., [3,4,5]). We expect animals inhabiting such lower quality habitats to be under greater ecological stress to meet their daily nutritional requirements, i.e., having to travel further each day to find preferred high quality foods (energy maximization) or having to rest more to save energy while eating lower quality foods (time minimizing) [3,10,11], and consuming a limited set of resources, including less fruit and more foliage [12,13]

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